Capital is not a
difficult book, at least not in the way that the Critique of Pure Reason, for example, is a difficult book. The central thesis of the book can be stated
in a simple declarative sentence of nine words: Capitalism rests on the
exploitation of the working class. But
although it is not a difficult book, it is a mysterious book because in it Marx
undertakes a task of the very greatest difficulty that no one before – and I
venture to say no one since – has fully comprehended let alone attempted. Marx tries first to show the reader that capitalism
is deeply ideologically mystified and he then attempts to demystify it by
revealing both its exploitative foundation and the ways in which that exploitation
is concealed by the ideological rationalizations of its professional apologists. Both Marx’s greatest predecessor, David Ricardo,
and his most brilliant successors, the neo-classical economists, conceived
capitalism to be complex, but not mysterious, presenting puzzles requiring
sophisticated solutions but not mysteries calling for unmasking.
The central ideological mystification of the apologists of capitalism
is their representation of industrial workers as legally free producers of a
commodity – their own labor – which they bring into the market as though it
were cloth or bread or iron, to be exchanged in a free, uncoerced equal exchange
for the commodities of other free producers.
The theoretical, dramatic, and literary pivot of the entire book is the
concluding paragraph of Chapter VI, “The Buying and Selling of Labour-Power.” It is worth quoting:
“This sphere that we are deserting, within whose boundaries
the sale and purchase of labour-power goes on, is in fact a very Eden of the
innate rights of man. There alone rule Freedom, Equality, Property and Bentham.
Freedom, because both buyer and seller of a commodity, say of labour-power, are
constrained only by their own free will. They contract as free agents, and the
agreement they come to, is but the form in which they give legal expression to
their common will. Equality, because each enters into relation with the other,
as with a simple owner of commodities, and they exchange equivalent for
equivalent. Property, because each disposes only of what is his own. And
Bentham, because each looks only to himself. The only force that brings them
together and puts them in relation with each other, is the selfishness, the
gain and the private interests of each. Each looks to himself only, and no one
troubles himself about the rest, and just because they do so, do they all, in
accordance with the pre-established harmony of things, or under the auspices of
an all-shrewd providence, work together to their mutual advantage, for the
common weal and in the interest of all.
On leaving this sphere of simple circulation or of exchange
of commodities, which furnishes the “Free-trader Vulgaris” with his views and
ideas, and with the standard by which he judges a society based on capital and
wages, we think we can perceive a change in the physiognomy of our dramatis
personae. He, who before was the money-owner, now strides in front as
capitalist; the possessor of labour-power follows as his labourer. The one with
an air of importance, smirking, intent on business; the other, timid and
holding back, like one who is bringing his own hide to market and has nothing
to expect but — a hiding.”
[This passage is, among other things, a brilliant inversion
of the most famous philosophical metaphor of the distinction between Appearance
and Reality, namely the Allegory of the Cave from Plato’s Republic, but that is neither here nor there.]
In much of the remaining three-fourths of Volume One, Marx
shows us in extraordinary detail the historical process, stretching over many
centuries, by which ordinary men and women have been deprived of control over
their means of production, their work processes, their tools, their laboring,
their very bodies, until, like Charlie Chaplin in Modern Times, they are trapped in a machine spitting out product
and making profits for the capitalists.
Throughout this process, the professional Economists have persisted
in propagating the mystified justification that the workers are free agents,
small commodity producers no different save in the magnitude of their operations
from the owners of mills or factories.
Marx makes it clear that there is no going back to an imaginary Merrie
Olde England in which the workers were supposedly owners of small farms or
workshops. The only way forward is for
the workers to unite, to form unions, to confront the factory owners as the
political manifestation of the generalized Worker that the development of
capitalism has created in the workplace.
As Marx says in the great Chapter X, The Working Day, “ in the
history of capitalist production, the determination of what is a working-day,
presents itself as the result of a struggle, a struggle between collective
capital, i.e., the class of capitalists, and collective
labour, i.e., the working-class.”
And so they did, by the tens of millions, in Europe and in
America. In a century of struggle,
unions compelled capitalists to shorten the work day, raise wages, make work
safer, even provide paid vacations, pensions, and family leave. As the old bumper sticker said: “Unions – they brought you the weekend.” In this country, by the 1960s, a third or more
of full time wage earners were members of unions.
Capital fought unionization every step of the way, sometimes
in the courts, sometimes in the streets with clubs and guns. Embracing fully the ideological mystifications
so brilliantly exposed by Marx, they described labor unions as “combinations in
restraint of trade.” If it was to be
illegal for producers of sugar or automobiles or hand sanitizers to collaborate
in restricting output in order to drive up prices above their natural
competitively determined level, then it must be equally illegal for the
producers of labor, the workers, to collaborate in withholding their product
from the market to restrict supply and drive up the wage.
Capital responded first with Right to Work laws, and then
with outsourcing any stages in the production process that could be carried out
in foreign low wage countries, and for a time this worked. But as more and more manufacturing was
transferred overseas, America shifted to a “post-industrial” service economy. In response, Capital transferred more and
more of its labor services to workers having no regular, permanent contractual
relationship to the firm. By switching
to “independent contractors,” the firms were relieved of any obligation to
provide pensions, health insurance, paid vacations, safe working conditions, or
guaranteed employment.
Workers were forced to become independent “small businesses”
offering their own labor as their “product.”
Isolated from fellow workers, they were unable to bargain
collectively. Benefits and protections
won over a century of dangerous, painful struggle evaporated. The
exploited were unable to secure any limits to the number of days a week or the
number of hours a day that they worked. What began as a merely theoretical
ideological rationalization for the exploitation of workers in factories became
an instantiation of that ideology in the daily lives of larger and larger
segments of the working class.
The Gig Economy had arrived.
It isn't "capital" that is the problem. It is the nexus of laws & social "relationships" set up by the current governance structures that are the problem.
ReplyDeleteThe idea of a "free market" is not a problem. It is a wonderful mechanism if allowed to be used.
My experience as a worker was that I was not allowed to see what corporate management was paying other workers, so I was "in the dark" as to the true value of my labour "power" that I was putting on offer.
An analogy: the legal structures in which we pay taxes is all "equal". But unlike a big corporation which can hire an army of tax accountants to find loopholes and lobbyists to create new ones, I'm not able to get my tax "burden" down to zero like the self-proclaimed "smart guy" like Trump.
Similarly, when "negotiating" for a salary I didn't have a team of analysts looking at similar industries and looking at the going wage scale of the community to identify the price point for selling labour "power". I negotiated in the dark.
Marx is wrong to pillory "capital". If I lived on an island where one guy sat one a shit load of gold bricks and the rest of us had none, he would have no "power" over us because I and the other workers would have no need of gold because you can't eat it.
The "mystification" is actually an accumulation of social custom, history, relationships, expectations, all nicely wrapped up in a legal system bought paid for by the ultra rich.
I think a better place to look today for the crux of the problem is not at "capital" but maybe at IP (Intellectual Property). The ultra rich have woven a skein of laws that allow the "holders" of IP to milk profits from us endlessly, e.g. how Disney keeps getting law makers to extend copyright so that Mickey Mouse never falls into the public domain. (Personally, I have no problem with the current generation of rapacious "capitalists" building up piles of filthy lucre like Scrooge McDuck. What I want to see is a legal system that forces them to disgorge upon their death. Andrew Carnegie's great wealth went toward building libraries. I have no problem with a "capitalist game" of building up huge wealth if we can ensure that upon death the game's rule then spread that wealth out among us via donations, inheritance taxes, or even state seizure. Capital isn't the problem: the State that has been bought by the ultra rich to write laws and a police to enforce them is the problem!
I enjoy your analysis, but I fear you put Marx on a pedestal. Yes, he had insights. And yes, you've identified the unique style of his writing and his witty references to other authors. But he's been dead for nearly 150 years. The world has moved on. We have very real problems. While a nod to the past is appropriate, we don't dutifully sit down and read Isaac Newton in the original Latin to learn our physics. I think your time would be better spent pointing to contemporaries who have advanced the analysis and the argument. No disrespect, but I would feel better if you gave off more of a sense of hope by pointing to progress in understanding why our civilization is trapped in the is endless "capitalistic" system where the rich get richer and the rest of us are supposed to be entertained by watching "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous"!
Another thought...
ReplyDeleteJust as "capital" is not the problem. The "aristocrat" of feudal times was not the problem.
The problem was in the social relationships, the customs, and expectations that the feudal system set up. It enabled a small group to control a large group. And that control meant that when a particularly vicious and cruel person rose to a high hereditary position, his cruelty was uncontrolled.
The problem is not in the accumulation of capital (society needs it and the glory of creating the legal fiction of a "corporation" was in the ability to accumulate lots of "little capital" into the mountains needed for really big projects). The problem is with the social relationships, the customs, and expectations that the capitalist system has set up. It enables a small group to control the life of the bottom 99%. That control means that when particularly heinous sociopaths rise to real positions of control in corporations (or in the case of political structures, a Trump rises to the top) the social system gives them free rein to abuse, extort, manipulate, and degrade others.
I'm a wild-eyed optimist who believes that we can blend "best features" and create a better future by keeping aspects of capitalism, mixing in best governance practices, and spread education and awareness that enables citizenry to keep their "rulers" accountable. Of course we will never get to utopia. The task of democracy is endless. Similarly, no legal system will hold back to forces of greed and evil indefinitely. Each generation must fight its own battles. The past into a map to the future, but it does hold "little gems" that can be milked for insight. Fresh ideas are always needed. A nod to the past is appropriate. But no "science" rests on its laurels. All real science constantly tests its hypotheses and runs experiments to both explore new phenomena, but also to ensure that "old certitudes" still hold up given the changing theoretically framework, i.e. there is not such thing as "97% consensus" as real science and there is no "settled science".
As chaos theory shows, life lives at the edge. Sure there are deterministic "rules" that kind of explain things. But there is always a vast sea of uncertainty called "the future" which keeps surprising us. (As a kid I always got a laugh at Isaac Asimov with this idea of The Foundation with is social "science" developed to the point where they could predict "the Future".) One thing I've learned over a long life is that you never really know what is around the next corner. That doesn't mean you can't "go with the odds" and use "rules of thumb" and rely on existing science. But the future will always be full of surprises.
This is an example of one of your blogs that is an aesthetic in action, all the parts linking together, part Marx, part Wolf, arriving with a massive and searing spotlight on the gig economy. Thank yoU!
ReplyDeleteTo one of the Anonymi, disguised because of career ambitions?
Marx is very much alive.
Yet another thought... but at a tangent:
ReplyDeleteI'm reading this article entitled "How the Pandemic Will End":
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/03/how-will-coronavirus-end/608719/
I've read Ed Yong for years. I enjoy what he writes.
I can recommend several things by Matt Ridley:
from March 10th
http://www.rationaloptimist.com/blog/coronavirus-is-the-wolf/
from March 22nd
http://www.rationaloptimist.com/blog/vaccine-for-coronavirus/
I'm a big fan of autodidact Willis Eschenbach
from March 24th:
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/03/24/the-italian-connection/
Sorry to interrupt the flow on Marx & Marxism.
I do enjoy your posts!
Please keep up the good work!
I remember back in 1970 being amazed to see "Marxism" in a context different from how it was presented as "the embodiment of evil" when I was told and started thinking about Marx's thesis that the social structures are an edifice built on top of economic relations (I hope I got that right). Anyway, it got me to thinking of the relationship between legal systems, economic theories, social relationships. A weird tangle all concocted in a stew of custom and historical relationships.
So I'm glad to say I'm a willing student. I may be rebellious and cantankerous fighting you all the way. But I like to read what you write and think about it!
I have no "career ambitions".
ReplyDeleteI've been retired for 10 years.
One thing I don't like about the blog are the "true believers".
I've been chased on blogs of the left and right by "true believers" who want to attack anybody who hasn't drunk the Kool-Aid.
I'm willing to see different points of view.
I'm willing to learn and change my opinions.
But I don't like being put down or lectured (hectored?) by those claiming "superiority".
Thank you, Professor Wolff. I appreciate the crystal clarity of this post.
ReplyDeleteI remain anonymous because my believe in "bottom up" civilization.
ReplyDeleteI don't like those how claim pre-eminence based on name, credentials, money, connections, etc.
I believe in the free-for-all of ideas in the marketplace of ideas just as I believe in the free-for-all of politics in a true democracy, and in the economic relationships in a free market.
I have no love for State or Church or the ideology of "Economics".
I like science because it is (theoretically) based on a marketplace of ideas where you step forward with your experiment or theory and present your case and either persuade others or not. The method requires "full disclosure" but nowhere does it require that you place your "name" on the scales as part of your defense of your ideas.
For Jerry Fresia...
ReplyDeleteHere's is definitely somebody who wants "their name" to be out there...
https://twitter.com/drwaheeduddin/status/1242680502731104257
Ya gotta give credit to Greta Thunberg.
She is definitely leading us to the future!
Anonymous
ReplyDeleteSorry, I just don't get the "anonymous" ...and haven't seen anything
on this blog that justifies it.....
Yes, say what you will about Greta, she puts herself out there.
I have been harrassed by "government" all my life.
ReplyDeleteI realize that by being "anonymous" that doesn't protect me from government (you should see my FBI file! it is as big as the old NYC phone book) and I had the RCMP come out and "monitor" my anarchist group that I ran in the early 1970s as a grad student at university.
I also do "anonymous" because I actually am a radical democrat, an anarchist, an anti-establishment figure. That means, I don't believe is figureheads or titles or leaders. I believe people should think for themselves and a "good idea" can come from anywhere. Every idea should be evaluated on the basis on its content, not the authority of "who" said it. (I'm for "organization" but it should be around ideas and not "leaders". I'm all for temporary leaders like ancient Rome that would put forward a time-limited leader like the "dictator" [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_dictator] with strict limited mandate. I accept the need for unitary action in certain circumstances, but am extremely wary of "power" and how it is handled.)
By the way... I do believe the "REVOLUTION IS AT HAND!" because we can now see such vanguard elements of the revolution now out calling the masses to "rise up!" and "redistribute wealth" and go on a "general strike"!!!
https://www.instagram.com/p/B-FppKxAFxm/
OK... I'm tongue-in-cheek, just as I was with Greta Thunberg.
But I find it funny how many people are moved to think a certain way, to act, or to "rise up in revolt!" based on a celebrity name.
I can think of no better leader for the coming Utopia than Britney Spears!
Oh wait... I'm thinking of the delightful rock star of 20 years ago.
I have visions of Karl Marx in 1871 grabbing a flag and waving it atop the cobblestones of the rising of the Paris Commune. How many would follow him? I'm afraid that he like Britney Spears was past his "best by date". He books & pamphlets were good and useful, but I'm afraid he, like Britney, never did and never could raise a revolution in their old age.
Sadly for old farts like myself, real social change comes from the bottom and from the young and from mass movements and not "name brands" or "famous faces" or "legends in their own mind".
Anonymous,
ReplyDeleteWhy this hysterical logorrheic animus against Marxism?
If this were a Zen Buddhist blog, would you spend so much time decrying its central focus? If this were a Platonist blog, would you find it so off course? If this were a Thomist blog, would you feel called upon to intervene at length to criticize the principle idea?
No, you would not and that's because you've been brainwashed for all your life against Marxism and Communism. You're old enough to see through all the brainwashing, to step back and judge Marxism like you would any other philosophy, without the animus, without the hysteria, with a sense of proportion and sanity.
Unlike Professor Wolff, I'm not a Marxist and I confess that I even find some positive features in the gig economy. Marxism is a philosophy with its merits and its drawbacks, from which you can learn a lot if you give it a chance. So, to paraphrase a song which you're old to recall, give Marxism a chance.
The sentences quoted by RPW in this post set the stage for, but do not actually contain, the explicit inversion of Plato's Allegory of the Cave -- that comes I think in the sentences that immediately follow the quoted passage (if I recall their placement correctly) where Marx says (paraphrasing) that one goes down into the "dark Satanic mills" to find the secret of the source of profit. (Down and not up, so the inversion is quite literal and directional.)
ReplyDeleteSince I really was struck by RPW's point on this when he made it in his online lectures, I think it's worth emphasizing where the inversion actually occurs.
'The central thesis of the book can be stated in a simple declarative sentence of nine words: Capitalism rests on the exploitation of the working class.'
ReplyDeleteThis means whatever you want it to mean -- there is no formal definition of 'Capitalism', or of 'exploitation', or of 'the working class'. I am guessing that others are more easily satisfied here than me, hooray for being more easily satisfied than me, but I'm willing to tarry for definitions?
Or instead of tarrying for definitions, you cd read one of the innumerable available secondary sources, such as RPW's bks on Marx, or Francis Wheen, _Marx's Das Kapital: A Biography_ or R. Heilbroner, _Marxism For and Against_, or Jonathan Wolff, _Why Read Marx Today?_, or J. Sperber, the relevant chapters in _Karl Marx: A Nineteenth Century Life_, etc etc, or any reliable online exposition. Or you cd even read Marx himself. The definitions of those terms as Marx used them in Capital are not hard to find, so why not spend ten minutes looking them up for yourself?
ReplyDeleteIn Marx's definitions, if you have to sell your labor-power in order to survive, you are a member of the working class. On the other hand, if you sell your labor-power merely to supplement an income derived in significant or predominant part from other sources (e.g. from investments in stocks or bonds, or a pension), you are not a member of the working class. I'm not entirely sure how much anyone should care about whether a given person is or is not a member of the working class in the strict Marxist sense, but if you do care you can apply the definition and determine whether any given person is or isn't.
ReplyDeleteMarx himself was a member of the working class during those periods of his life (if there were any) when he was dependent on his income from journalism for survival. But he generally had other sources of support, e.g. money from Engels. So even though Marx was often in debt and was hounded by creditors, and even though Marx and his family lived in what has been described as genteel poverty, Marx himself was probably not a member of the working class in the Marxist sense. Engels definitely was not. But so what? The validity or invalidity of their political views and their theoretical positions does not hinge on whether they themselves were members of the class that they hoped would eventually overthrow capitalism (and create a better world).
Unionization is great like being overpaid is great, and no, really, it's great, but this is all academic -- if the virus doesn't dissipate by June, then by the time the virus does recede, tens of millions of Americans will have no jobs to which they can return. That seems like it might resemble a protracted economic breakdown as serious as the 1930s. The upside is maybe is you'll have time to study actual economics.
ReplyDeleteMr/s. Anonymous provides, through their mistaken understanding and notable ignorance of Marx's works, a perfect demonstration of the anarcho-capitalist fallacy: capital isn't the problem; government meddling is.
ReplyDeleteLike any fallacy, it's got an element of truth, but that truth is disjointed from the context, thereby invalidating it. Yes, government support for the capitalist class is a heavy thumb on the scale. But what would happen if the government became, by magic, perfectly neutral? We don't need to guess—we simply trace the capitalists' behavior back through history—to the endless workdays, the child labor, the horrific working conditions. Or, if you prefer, find those same conditions in many areas still today. Are we to suppose that these are just rotten apples of the capitalist class? We must, if we are to say, as Mr/s. Anonymous does, that capitalists aren't the problem.
Furthermore, it's not about the behavior of capitalists like Rockefeller. First, this widespread reverence for philanthropic library-building and disease-fighting is one of the most disappointing things to see among the working class. If these "philanthropists" didn't monopolize the surplus value by threat of government weapons, we wouldn't need the charity to begin with. Secondly, only once the capitalist has accumulated an unshakeable amount of wealth do you find him throwing some back into the streets for the miserable common folk. As Marx noted, the capitalists are themselves coerced by capital. But I suppose there's no point in elaborating on it, as it was written 150 years ago, and the thought has now expired.
With that said, it's nice to see someone engaging with substantive material, even if they disagree with it.
And speaking of disagreement, I think the reality of scientific process is very different from the one presented by Anonymous—where ideas enter the marketplace and compete on merit, not name. Thomas Kuhn's writings debunked this idea half a decade ago, and we see the stubbornness of certain ideas everywhere today, e.g. the controversy over alzheimer's research, as well as the value of a name (run a thought experiment where you submit controversial theories under different names—say Robert Sapolsky vs. Joe Smith).
Anyway, I appreciate the blog and the disagreements we're able to have here.
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ReplyDelete